Sunday, February 1, 2026

James S Piper, 1870 - 1874

  ©  Kathy Duncan, 2026 

By 1870, James S. Piper was in Marion County, Texas, with his new family:










Not surprisingly, James Piper's occupation is that of a contractor. He had $600 in real estate, and I have seen a deed record for James S. Piper in Marion County. His new wife, Mary A. Piper, is 45 years old and born in Tennessee, and their implied daughter, Laura, is 3 years old, also born in Tennessee. I estimate that James S. Piper and Mary Ann were married in about 1866. Where is currently unknown. Did James and Mary Ann meet in Georgia or Tennessee? Mary Ann would have been 41 at the time of their marriage. At that age, it is very likely that she had been married previously. 

I have not identified George Dyke. Was he an unrelated boarder or a family member? It's possible that he was a son of Mary Ann's. 

My cousin's family was told that James S. Piper and Mary Ann were Laura's grandparents. The only other candidate that I have for her father is James S. Piper Jr. 

In 1870, James S. Piper, Jr. was still in Carroll County, Maryland:










He was boarding with Theodore F. Engler, who was the first cousin of Ezra Engler, who provided testimony as to Mary (O'Hara) Piper's noncupative will in 1867. In 1870, James S. Piper was a 21-year-old farm laborer. In 1867, when Laura L. Piper was born, he would have been 18. He would have spent the previous year fending for himself after the death of his mother. On closer examination, he seems like an unlikely candidate to be Laura's father. I wonder if the Lennon family story was that James S. Piper and Mary Ann were old enough to be Laura's grandparents? 

In 1870, Horatio N. Piper was in Baltimore working as a bookkeeper. William H. Piper was serving with the 23rd Infantry in either Portland or Vancouver. 

In 1871, James S. Piper, Sr., was living in a house on the Gillespie survey in Marion County, Texas. That year he was also sued by the state of Texas for obtaining money under false pretenses. 

He appeared on the Marion County, Texas tax rolls from 1871 through 1874. Then he disappeared from their tax rolls. 

James S. Piper, 1865 - 1869

   ©  Kathy Duncan, 2026


After the Civil War, James S. Piper disappeared from Washington DC and Baltimore. However, a J. S. Piper emerged in Atlanta, Georgia in 1865. Like James S. Piper, this J.S. Piper was engaged in the construction business. Orders could be left at the store of J.T. Meador, Esq. 







In 1866, James S. Piper of Atlanta travelled to Chattanooga, Tennessee, and stayed at Crutchfield House.














By 1868, James S. Piper, a mason, was a partner with John Law, a plasterer. They seem to be in business with James R. Slayton. This advertisement appeared several times in the Chattanooga Daily American Union. My conclusion is that the J. S. Piper who was a contractor in Atlanta, Georgie was James S. Piper and that he relocated to Chattanooga, Tennessee. 





















Two days after this advertisement ran the partnership between J. R. Slayton, Jas S. Piper, and John law was dissolved.














A year later, Jas. S. Piper was supervising the construction of a three-story brick building for General Brown. A few years later, a flood destroyed much of downtown Chattanooga. I have not determined if this building survived. 



















Is this the same James S. Piper I've been researching? My gut says, "yes." This man appears in Atlanta at the same time James S. Piper disappeared from his Baltimore/Washington DC stomping grounds. Then he relocated to Chattanooga just in time for the Tennessee birth of his daughter, Laura Lee Piper, in 1867. 

This James S. Piper also seems to magically disappear from Chattanooga before the 1870 census was taken. 

This move would have placed James S. Piper in Atlanta, Georgia, when former wife, Mary, died in Carroll County, Maryland. William H. Piper joined the army during this time period. Horatio N. Piper seems to have been in Baltimore. It's possible that James S. Piper, Jr. made his way to Atlanta or Chattanooga to join his father. 


Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Mary (O'Hara) Piper, 1866

  ©  Kathy Duncan, 2026

Mary O'Hara was James S. Piper's first wife. They married in Baltimore, Maryland, on 31 June 1841. Their little son, Henry Clay Piper, died on 4 August 1845 in Baltimore.  

Then James S. Piper turned up on the 1860 census of Washington DC with a wife named Elizabeth and a son named William H. Piper. The old me would have killed off Mary O'Hara by 1860 and assumed that there were no surviving children from the marriage of Mary O'Hara and James S. Piper. 

But that was the old me.

This census record for a Mary Piper and son James S. Piper turned up on the 1850 census for Carroll County, Maryland. 






Mary Piper was 24 years old and had been born in England. Her implied son was James S. Piper, age 4, born in Maryland. If this was James S. Piper's wife, where was he?

Then a Findagrave memorial for Mary Piper turned up. She died on 31 December 1866 and was buried in the Meadow Branch Cemetery in Westminster, Carroll County, Maryland. Her tombstone says that she was 40 years old, so she is the same Mary Piper who was on the 1850 Carroll County census. To date, I have not found her or her son James S. Piper on the 1860 census.

But was she the first wife of James S. Piper?

Mary Piper's noncupative will contained testimony from several people. Apparently, Mary Piper had been living with Elizabeth Englar for several years. Everyone testified that Mary wished for her property to go to her son James S. Piper. However, their testimony also revealed that she had one other son from whom she had been estranged:















The testimony of Elizabeth Englar's son, Ezra, revealed that the other son of Mary Piper was "always absent and had been weaned from her [Mary]": 















Their testimony did not reveal the name of the other son; however, he promptly turned up to contest her will. He was none other than Horatio N. Piper:













The court, however, recognized James S. Piper as the sole heir.

In 1850, Horatio N. Piper was living in the household of his grandfather, Philip Piper, in Baltimore. Horatio was eight years old, so he was two years older than James S. Piper, Jr. Where was James S. Piper, Sr., in 1850? He was not with either of his sons by Mary O'Hara nor with Mary. My guess is that James Sr. was somewhere with his son, William H. Piper, and possibly with William's mother. That's just a guess.

In 1880, Horatio N. Piper was living with his wife, Cora, and his aunts, Lizzie and Mattie Piper. They were all still living in Baltimore.

When Horatio N. Piper married Cora Felch in Boston, Massachusetts, on 25 July 1878, he stated that his parents were James S. and Mary Piper. 

Horatio N. Piper died in the 1880s. His obituary emphasized that he was the grandson of Philip Piper, deceased, of Baltimore:
















Somewhere, there is a divorce record for James S. Piper and Mary. I think James was too public a figure to commit bigamy. Their divorce would have occurred before William H. Piper's birth in 1848. Then there should be a marriage record somewhere for the marriage between James S. Piper and William H. Piper's mother. I would guess that marriage occurred by 1847. Since James S. Piper, Jr., was born about 1846, that creates a small window of time in which a divorce and remarriage occurred.

When the statement was made that Mary's other son, Horatio, was "weaned away from her," it is almost literal. James S. Piper, Jr. was probably still a nursing baby when Mary and James S. Piper parted ways, so she would have been able to keep him. Horatio would have been a toddler. When other events of James S. Piper's life are taken into consideration, yet another picture emerges. In May 1846, James S. Piper was raising a company to fight in the Mexican War. He returned in 1847. At the same time, his marriage with Mary fell apart, he entered a relationship/marriage with someone else, and had another son by 1848. 

Updated: 1 February 2026. 

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

William H. Piper, 1871 - 1873

 ©  Kathy Duncan, 2026

Part Two

Six days after William H. Piper was released from San Quentin, he re-enlisted in the army on 28 January 1869 and served in the 23rd Infantry, Company C.  After receiving a pardon from the governor, he had a second chance to get things right. That lasted about a year and a half.

Once again, when he enlisted, William H. Piper listed his occupation as musician. From that, I am guessing that he served in the band. 

The 23rd Infantry's band was stationed with the infantry. Mostly, they were in Portland, Oregon, but occasionally they relocated to Fort Vancouver, Washington. The band was highly thought of by the Portland community. So much so that their activities were followed in the local newspapers. The band also did their own recruiting:








They marched in the funeral processions of officers. They marched in a parade to honor Washington's birthday:










They played in the evening in the plaza of Portland, and their program was published in the newspaper in advance. They performed twice a week:












They competed at the State Fair:










William H. Piper deserted on 9 July 1871 at Fort Vancouver. Where he went from there and what he did is unknown. He remained on the run for around four months before he was arrested on 8 November 1871. This clipping states he deserted on 9 August, which is different from William H. Piper's military records.






On 7 November 1871, the same paper reported that a deserter from the 23rd was apprehended but escaped in route to Vancouver. Were these reports both about William H. Piper, or were there two deserters? If there were two, why were so many deserting?








My bigger question is, why did William H. Piper stay in the area? He could have cleared out, gone back east, but he stuck around. Why?

William H. Piper was court-martialed in Vancouver in December of 1871 and sentenced to serve time at Fort Alcatraz.  Because he deserted in peacetime, his sentence was light. If he had deserted during the Civil War, he would have been executed. 

Alcatraz, 1895










At the time of William H. Piper's incarceration, Alcatraz was a fort and military prison. William entered Alcatraz on 12 January 1872 and served his time there even though he was given a dishonorable discharge on 12 December 1871. A notation in his records refers to estimates for repairs to a hospital. 

William H. Piper was released from Alcatraz in June 1873, even though he did not serve his full sentence. He may have been released early for good behavior.

I have no further records of William H. Piper. As far as I can tell, he did not re-enlist in the army. That might be because the U.S. military had tightened its standards. Previously, men deserted for a variety of reasons - not enough food, low pay, slow pay, or general unhappiness. Then they could take advantage by re-enlisting and collecting a signing bonus. The military stopped allowing deserters to reenlist about the same time William was released from Alcatraz.

When William H. Piper left Alcatraz in the summer of 1873, he was 25 years old. For nine years, from the age of 16 to 25, he had either been in military service or serving in prison. He had been too young to learn any facet of the construction business from his father, and he was not raised on a farm. Therefore, he laced these skills. His marketable skills would have as a laborer or as a musician. The future probably looked bleak to him.

I have no evidence that William H. Piper tried to rejoin his father and brother, who were in Texas in 1873. It is possible that he had completely lost touch with them. 

If William were a character in a novel, I would predict a very bad end for him. Probably a life of crime. But California was a place where people reinvented themselves and started over. Anything was possible. 



Elizabeth (Powers) Piper, Plot Twist

James S Piper, 1864

James S Piper Goes to Philadelphia, 1876

William H. Piper, 1864 - 1871



Sunday, January 25, 2026

Clara Ann Galt, Daughter of James J. and Mary Ann (Brown) Galt

©  Kathy Duncan, 2026

Clara Ann Galt, born about 1869 in Nebraska, to James Junius and Mary Ann (Brown) Galt is included on the double tombstone of her parents in the Appleton City Cemetery of Appleton City, Missouri. Only her name appears on the stone. No dates.

At the time of Clara Ann Galt's death in 1882, her parents and family were living in Bates County, Missouri, on the Blackwell farm in the southeast portion of the county. Here is the first newspaper clipping that I found about her death:
















It's in very poor condition, but it indicates that Clara died on Sunday and was buried on Monday with the funeral held in her parents' home. The words "Appleton cem" can just be made out along the top of the bottom portion of the article. Her extended family from Appleton City, St. Clair County, Missouri, must have travelled to the Blackwell farm to be in attendance. Then they must have formed a procession back to Appleton City for her burial. 

The second article that I found provided Clara's cause of death:















Of the three children, Clara was the one who died. They may have contracted typhoid or cholera. Based on census records, the other two must have survived. This makes me wonder who cared for the sick children while their parents attended their sister's funeral. Perhaps a neighbor stepped in to help? 

Sunday, January 4, 2026

Lonnie Cecil Clyburn's "Medical Career"

     ©  Kathy Duncan, 2026

In my last post on Lewis H. Kelley, aka Lonnie Cecil Clyburn, I speculated that he had gone to Llano, Texas, to further his bogus medical career. But did he?

First, let's back up to 21 June 1913, when Red River County issued an arrest warrant against L. Clyburn for unlawfully practicing medicine. They also fined him $250, and each of his sureties was ordered to pay $250. On 27 June 1913, Lonnie C. Clyburn was probably with wife, Mettie (Bartlett) Clyburn, in Needville, Fort Bend County, Texas, when Mettie gave birth to their son, Lonnie Frank Clyburn. 

They must not have been in Needville very long because they turned up in Llano, Texas, nine months later. L. C. Clyburn ran this notice about leaving Llano for a few days for health reasons, but leaving his meat market business in the hands of Zumwalt. The only Zumwalt in town was a partner in a tailoring business. Zumwalt had not been in Llano very long either. 








































The odds are very good that the L. C. Clyburn is Lonnie Cecil Clyburn. There are no Clyburns in Llano County on the 1910 or 1920 census. No advertisements were run for Clyburn's meat market. This is the only mention of it in the newspaper.

On his way out of town, L. C. Clyburn stopped off at the courthouse long enough to file his paperwork from Red River County, which, of course, has no notation on it that they did not recognize the legitimacy of his medical license. A duplicate of his "medical license" was filed on 26 March 1914, a week after the meat market notice ran in the newspaper. 






















For many reasons, which will be covered in another post, it seems likely that L.C. Clyburn presented Llano County with his copy of the duplicate that he filed in Red River County and not his medical license from the state of Texas. 

By filing this document in Llano County, he now had a new document that could be presented elsewhere. It also created a long chain of removal from the medical license that was supposedly issued in 1908 - that chain now ran through Tarrant County, Red River County, and Llano County. Now, he could go to another county and present his Llano County duplicate. 

Why run a notice that he was leaving temporarily if his intention was to relocate elsewhere? If he owed someone money, he may have wanted to give the appearance that he intended to return rather than skedaddle. 

On 8 April 1914, Lewis H. Kelley's first wife, Eula Ann (Morgason) Kelley, obtained a divorce from him in Wood County, Texas, where the court noted that his whereabouts were unknown. 

On 13 and 30 November 1914, an advertisement for the Enterprise Mattress Factory ran in The Banner-Ledger of Ballinger, Texas. As far as I can tell, no advertisements ran before or after these dates. No one with the Clyburn surname appeared on the 1910 or 1920 Runnels County, Texas census. 











This advertisement indicates that L. C. Clyburn was probably not practicing medicine in Runnels County.

Ballinger, Texas, is 122 miles from Llano, Texas. Today, that is a two-hour car ride. In 1914, it would have taken much longer by wagon. Ballinger, Texas, is also on the way to the panhandle of Texas.

The next document that L. C. Clyburn appeared on is the original birth certificate of his daughter, Thelma Clyburn.
















This document places L. C. and Mettie (Bartlett) Clyburn in Amarillo, Potter County, Texas on 21 November 1915. Note that L.C. Clyburn's occupation is listed as "Business Man" not doctor or physician. E.A. Johnston, the doctor on this certificate, would surely have known if L.C. Clyburn was another doctor practicing medicine in Amarillo and would have recognized him as such.

The other thing to notice is that the child's name is left blank on this document. This required Thelma Clyburn to obtain a corrected birth certificate in 1948.


























Thelma's mother, Mettie (Bartlett) Clyburn Burrow, filled out this form. Notice that even though L. C. Clyburn was a "business man" and not practicing medicine at the time of Thelma's birth, Mettie stated that he was a medical doctor.

By the time World War I started, the Clyburns were in Chicota, Lamar County, Texas, where L.C. Clyburn enlisted. The Paris newspaper referred to him as Dr. L. C. Clyburn, but it is hard to know if he was practicing medicine or just using the title of doctor.













The U.S. Veterans Bureau lists him as a private in the Medical Department. Note that army records reflected Lewis H. Kelley's 1977 birthdate that he shared with his twin Ross T. Kelley, and not the 1876 date that Lonnie C. Clyburn used on his various medical licenses. 
















On 31 August  1918, L. C. Clyburn was on the roster of the U.S. Army Base Hospital at Eagle Pass, Texas.


























By World War I, doctors served as noncommissioned officers with a rank of at least a captain. They did not serve as privates - especially if they had been educated at Johns Hopkins. L. C. Clyburn's service as a private indicates that he was most likely an orderly in a hospital. 

The accurate birthdate filed with the army and his service as a private indicate that L.C. Clyburn was willing to risk scamming local government officials but not the U.S. military. 

After the war, L. C. Clyburn continued to live in Chicota, Lamar County, Texas, where he was predominantly a farmer and hauled ice for Griffin and Townsend's store. He was also absent for large periods of time while he was an inmate in various military hospitals.

In October 1922, his teeth were in poor condition, and a pearl from an oyster got trapped in a "hollow tooth." Notice that he was not referred to as "Dr. L. C. Clyburn." 





















In 1923, when L.C. Clyburn was seeking admission to a military hospital in San Antonio, he was referred to an "ex-service man." Note that he is not referred to as "Dr. L. C. Clyburn."




















Lonnie Cecil Clyburn died in Chicota, Texas in 1924.



























Lonnie Cecil Clyburn's death notice states that he had been a resident of Chicota, Texas, for the last ten or twelve years. However, twelve years before his death, in 1912, he was in Red River County, Texas, filing a duplicate of his medical license papers from Tarrant County, Texas. Eleven years before his death, in 1913, he was in Needville, Texas, dodging a warrant for practicing medicine unlawfully in Red River County, while waiting for his second wife to give birth to their first child. Ten years before his death, in 1914, he was running a meat market in Llano, Texas, and operating a mattress factory in Ballinger, Texas, while probably hoping that his first wife would not charge him with bigamy. Of course, she probably did not know that he had married another woman, or that would have been cited as a contributing factor to her 1914 request for a divorce. Nine years before his death, in 1915, he was in Amarillo, Texas, engaged in an unknown business when his daughter Thelma was born.   

Lewis Hamilton Kelley, aka Lonnie Cecil Clyburn, left his family with a lot of unanswered questions that have lingered for decades. He also left a lot of hard feelings among the various families of his siblings. 

Why claim to be the son of Capt. Lewis L. Clyburn and wife, Mary Jane Kelley, a prominent Camden, South Carolina family, who would never give away one of their children? The only answer seems to be that it conferred an aura of prominence on Lewis Hamilton Kelley. Plus, he needed a new name to use in order to marry one woman while being already married to another. Not to mention the charges of embezzlement that he was facing in Marion County, Texas in 1910. At the time he abandoned his wife, Eula, he had sold some mortgaged property. She did not learn of this until after he had left her without a penny. 

Why shift his birthdate by one year, but not the day or month? Because it put some distance between his real identity as Lewis H. Kelley.

Why claim to be a graduate of Johns Hopkins? This a claim that was made at least three times - in Tarrant County, in Red River County, and in Llano County. Because Johns Hopkins provided both an aura of prominence and was far away. It would take several months for the truth to catch up to him, and he was moving frequently.

Why claim to be a doctor, but not seem to ever practice medicine much? Because people tend to trust doctors. Being a doctor provides you with an aura of respectability. People are more likely to lend you money, give you a job, or go into business with you.  

Thursday, January 1, 2026

Wishing You a Happy 2026

    ©  Kathy Duncan, 2026





















Oddly, this year flew by even though each day seemed like a week long.

I managed to write 25 posts and have done a lot of research that has not been written up yet. This year, there were 123,781 page views, ending in a total of 392,237. That is not as exciting as it sounds since it is obvious that there are days when foreign entities are sending their webcrawlers to collect data on who knows what. 

This year's most popular posts in order:

1. Elizabeth (Powers) Piper, Plot Twist: This post was probably only popular because there is a famous person also named Elizabeth Powers, so a lot of people must have landed on this post by mistake. This was an important post in my research into James S. Piper's wives. I was happy to uncover Elizabeth's identity with the help of the full-text search on FamilySearch. However, the discovery of her identity indicates that there must be yet another wife, who was the mother of William H. Piper.

2. John Byrum, Bastardy Bond: This post was the most eye-opening one for me. Illegitimate births were more common in this time period than I realized, especially among widows. Unfortunately, most states were not keeping the level of records that North Carolina was. I was eventually able to uncover the identity of John Byrum's out-of-wedlock child and the correct Elizabeth Webb with the help of a group of Webb researchers on Facebook. Of course, I still need to write the follow-up post for that. 

3. Samuel Moore's Connections: In this post, I examined Samuel Moore as a candidate for the father of Arsena Moore and her siblings, and I tracked him back to Pitt County, North Carolina, where I was able to connect him to his parents and siblings. However, I do not have enough information to prove that Samuel was the father of Arsena (Moore) Barber.

My favorite blog posts:

1. Joseph Barber and the Moore Family: This post represented a breakthrough in connecting Arsena Moore to any other Moore. I had started to wonder if she really was a Moore. In the process, I found Arsena's siblings. Now I have a group of siblings looking for their parents. 

2. Nancy (Johnson) Brown and Elizabeth (Johnson) Selvy, sisters: This post centered around my breakthrough in locating Nancy (Johnson) Brown's long lost sister, Elizabeth Johnson. The Johnson name is so common that I did not think I would ever figure out what happened to her. This brick wall was broken down by one of those town gossip newspaper columns that recounted Cade Selvy's visit to his Lacy aunts and uncles in Kansas. Researching Cade Selvy led to his mother, Elizabeth Johnson, and her reunion with her sister, Mrs. J. D. Brown [Nancy (Johnson) Brown]!

3. James S. Piper Goes to Philadelphia, 1876: This little post recounts James S. Piper's trip to Philadelphia to celebrate the nation's Centennial as a representative of the Mexican War Veterans. This is the event for which his medal was created. That medal was the catalyst for my research into James S. Piper, my first cousins' ancestor. James S. Piper and his family have taught me a lot about various record groups.  

In the new year, I have plenty more posts about James S. Piper and family to write up, which is going to be my focus for a while. I also have a lot of information to post about the Selvys and the Brown's son Joel Herbert Brown. Finally, I need to follow up with the illegitimate child of John Byrum.